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RDSI Initiative uses Aspera for Science DMZ data mover

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Harmeet
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EMERYVILLE, USA: Aspera Inc., creators of next-generation software technologies that move the world's large data at maximum speed, announced that the Australian Government Initiative, the Research Data Storage Infrastructure (RDSI) Project.

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Working closely with the Australian Government's National Research Network (NRN) Project, RDSI Project is deploying solutions from Aspera to move large data to, from and between nationally-dispersed storage nodes and high-performance computing centers to strengthen Australia's capabilities in data-intensive research collaboration.

Funded through the the Education Investment Fund under the Super Science (Future Industries) initiative, and led by the University of Queensland, the RDSI project has received A$50 million in federal funding to provide data storage and collaboration infrastructure for Australia's research community. The project is intended to assist institutions and researchers to more easily and effectively access, use, manage and share large holdings of research data, expanding the scale and scope of problems that Australian researchers may seek to address.

The network consists of eight high-performance data storage locations throughout Australia, with associated Data Transfer Nodes - clusters of high-performance host computers and storage - connected by a fast network optimized for high-performance scientific applications. Aspera Connect Server software is being deployed on all hosts in each Data Transfer Node in a high availability configuration to provide ultra high-speed transfers regardless of data size and network distance.

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The Aspera Shares web application was selected to provide a browser-based, user-friendly overlay for uploading and downloading file content to and from the Nodes and fine-grained control for researchers to manage access to their data, with built-in authentication for the LDAP and single sign-on SAML services, common throughout the research community.

For initial data ingest, researchers simply upload data to the Aspera Connect Server clusters at each Node using the freely downloadable Connect Web Browser Plug-in, which integrates directly with all browser platforms to support high-speed fasp transfers of any file size directly in the browser or from the command line. Once ingested, Aspera Shares provides easy access to shared data with a single web interface to consolidate browsing of shared content across all nodes, enabling fast collaboration between researchers at major universities throughout Australia.

In addition to speed and security, the Aspera technology provides complete control over transfer bandwidth and finish times, and is robust to network outages with automatic retry and resume of even the largest data sets.

During the pilot deployment of the Aspera solution, a research group at a university located in central Queensland, with relatively limited network bandwidth, had an urgent requirement to transfer approximately 1.1TB of data overnight to a government agency in the state capital of Brisbane, where one of the RDSI Nodes is located. The bandwidth management and automatic resume features of the Aspera solution were critical in meeting the deadline, as the transfer could use only 40 percent of the available bandwidth, and the network link was shut down for several hours during the night for preventative maintenance.

RDSI also selected Aspera Console, the web-based management application, to provide complete visibility over the Aspera transfer environment, including real-time, centralized control over transfers, nodes and users.

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